H
recent
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

European takeover battle hots up with UniCredit’s ‘unfriendly attack’ on Commerzbank

about 3 hours ago
A picture


Two European banking powerhouses have become embroiled in a €35bn (£30bn) takeover battle after Italy’s UniCredit stepped up its long-running pursuit of German lender Commerzbank, despite strong opposition from the German government.UniCredit first took a stake of 9% in Commerzbank in September 2024 and has since built up its holding to just under 30%.It said on Monday it was pushing to increase that holding further and push the rival lender into formal merger talks.Under German law, a shareholder that has a more than 30% stake is required to make a takeover bid.The Milan-headquartered bank said on Monday it was planning a share swap that would imply a €30.

8 price per Commerzbank share, or about €34.7bn in total.Commerzbank’s share price rose to €31.30 on Monday in early trading.The move puts it on a collision course with Commerzbank’s board and the German state, which bailed the bank out during the 2008 financial crisis and still has a more than 12% holding.

“UniCredit signals openness for ​dialogue and willingness to build bridges with Commerzbank and key stakeholders,” Unicredit said,UniCredit said the offer would push it beyond the “30% cliff-edge that exists under German takeover law and foster constructive engagement with Commerzbank and its stakeholders in the coming weeks”,It added: “The board of UniCredit regards this offer as a sensible, pragmatic measure with no downside given that the existing stake continues to be significantly value accretive irrespective of the offer,”Frankfurt-based Commerzbank is one of the oldest banks in Germany, founded in 1870,It has about 40,000 employees across 40 countries.

The 2008 bailout involved the German government injecting €18,2bn of cash,Last year, a spokesperson for the German finance ministry said: “The federal government supports Commerzbank’s strategy of independence,The federal government has already made this very clear to UniCredit,”The former German chancellor Olaf Scholz has also called the Italian move “an unfriendly attack”.

UniCredit is Italy’s second-largest lender, and has returned to profitability after the global financial crisis.It now owns another German bank, HypoVereinsbank.Commerzbank, meanwhile, is one of the biggest lenders to the Mittelstand – the small and medium-sized family-owned businesses that form the backbone of the German economy.However, it has come under repeated takeover attempts, including a collapsed merger deal with Deutsche Bank.UniCredit said it expects to launch the offer formally at the beginning of May, after a shareholder meeting where it will seek to gain investor approval for the move.

Other major investors in Commerzbank include BlackRock, with just under 6%, and Norway’s sovereign wealth fund, which holds about 3%.
trendingSee all
A picture

Thames Water lenders float new £10bn rescue plan

Thames Water’s lenders have put forward a £10bn rescue plan that would involve paying off the troubled water company’s hundreds of millions of pounds-worth of fines for leaks and pollution, as part of an effort to stave off financial collapse.A group of private equity firms and investment groups said they would inject about £3.35bn of cash into Thames Water and raise £6.65bn in debt, in exchange for the company not falling into a government-handled administration, in effect a temporary nationalisation.Bills for Thames Water’s 16 million customers in south-east England are already due to rise steeply until 2030 but the rescue plan would, at least, hold them at that level rather than pushing them even higher

about 5 hours ago
A picture

Taxpayer bill for saving Scunthorpe steel furnaces could top £1.5bn by 2028, auditor says

The cost of keeping the UK’s last remaining blast furnaces going at British Steel’s Scunthorpe plant could exceed £1.5bn by 2028 if it continues at its current rate, according to the government’s spending watchdog.Ministers took the plant into public control in April last year, after its Chinese owner – industrial firm Jingye – threatened to shut down the loss-making site.The National Audit Office (NAO), which monitors state spending, said the intervention saved thousands of jobs at Scunthorpe and prevented a “serious impact” on UK industry, including Network Rail, which buys steel for the railways from the plant.Shutting the plant would also have ended Britain’s “primary” steel-making ability because blast furnaces allow steel to be made from scratch, rather than relying on scrap metal

about 14 hours ago
A picture

AI has exposed age-old problems with university coursework | Letter

The frustration many academics are expressing about artificial intelligence and critical thinking is understandable (‘I wish I could push ChatGPT off a cliff’: professors scramble to save critical thinking in an age of AI, 10 March). But from my experience working with students on academic writing, blaming AI risks masking a problem that universities have lived with for years.In my work with students, I have long seen the ways in which thinking can be outsourced when assessment allows it: essay mills, shared past papers, model essays passed between cohorts, or heavy reliance on tutors and friends to structure assignments. Artificial intelligence did not invent this behaviour. It has simply industrialised a shortcut that already existed

about 21 hours ago
A picture

Trump administration reportedly set to be paid $10bn for brokering TikTok deal

Donald Trump’s administration is reportedly poised to be paid $10bn by investors as part of a deal to create a US-controlled version of TikTok.The $10bn, considered by the US government as a sort of transaction fee, will be paid by the administration-friendly investors who took control of TikTok’s US operations from its Chinese parent company, ByteDance, according to reporting that first appeared in the Wall Street Journal.The investors in the popular social media app include software company Oracle; MGX, an investment firm based in the United Arab Emirates; and private equity business Silver Lake. These entities, along with other backers, paid $2.5bn to the US treasury when the deal closed in January and are set to make further payments in the unusual arrangement until the total hits $10bn

2 days ago
A picture

Sydney Swans admit to altering Bondi attack tribute to omit mention of Jewish community

The Sydney Swans have again apologised for the club’s “error of judgment” that resulted in the Jewish community not being mentioned in the AFL’s opening round pre-match tribute to victims of the Bondi terror attack.In a statement on Monday, the club attempted to absolve the AFL of any blame after the league was referred to the royal commission on antisemitism and social cohesion by Liberal senator James Paterson.Before the Swans’ season-opening game against Carlton at the SCG, Sydney’s chief executive, Matthew Pavlich, led a tribute to victims of the Bondi attack and first responders, some of whom joined the teams on the field.The club has now apologised multiple times, after journalist and former player Gerard Healy revealed Pavlich’s speech had been edited to remove references to the Jewish community.“There was no directive or instruction from the AFL to remove or change the reference to the Jewish Community in the script,” the club said in a statement

about 6 hours ago
A picture

Cheltenham raised a cheer – but fatalities and fallouts tainted bounce-back festival

Attendance: up. British winners: up. Bookies’ profits: through the roof. Punters will wince at the last of those after a ferociously difficult four days at Cheltenham, with winners at 66-1, 50-1, 40-1 and 33-1 among the biggest skinners for the books. The Paddy Power client in Ireland who was paid €558,000 (£484,000) after putting Friday’s first six winners into a 50 cent each-way Lucky 63 would be a very worthy inductee into the Cheltenham Hall of Fame

about 7 hours ago
businessSee all
A picture

Oil company shares soar to all-time highs as Middle East war turbocharges price per barrel

about 21 hours ago
A picture

Beyond the strait: why attacks on Kharg Island could keep oil prices high

about 23 hours ago
A picture

AI could give us our lives back – if we don’t blow it

about 24 hours ago
A picture

‘Cruel hoax’ or ‘work-life balance nirvana’: whatever happened to the four-day work week?

about 24 hours ago
A picture

Stout clobber? Guinness tie-up features £1,295 ‘pub carpet’ jumper

1 day ago
A picture

Relief for some of Britain’s poorest lands at right moment to cushion Iran aftershocks | Heather Stewart

1 day ago